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vol 111 th1kd series salisbury n 1 october c 1871 no 3 whole no 795 carolina ttlatcljuifltt published weekly bt j j bruner editor and proprietor rates of si ihiui'hon o.ve ykai payaldein udvauce 2.50 six months **â€¢ '* 1 . r i t'upii-s to one address 10.00 kates of ailccrlisitiq on sqnare first insertion 1,00 for each additional iusertiou 50 special notices u ill be charged 50 per cent higher than the above rate court and justice's order will he publish ed at the same rates with other advertise ments obituary notices over six lines charged as advertise inentfi contract hates z i i Â£Â£ i o i ? =â– - * s space Â§ g ss 5 Â«= p ~ â€” l v * f si.iiare 2 50 â€¢â– *>.<. 7 500 7 50 12 00 â€¢â€žâ€¢ s.|iiares 1 . r l 6 25 8 50 12 00 20.00 3 squares i <Â»<Â» !Â» <Â»Â»Â» 12 <><> id ml 25,00 4 squaws k km 1iki 15 0025 00 3.1,50 i oliimn 18 00 24 00 30 00 40 00 00.00 1 column 25 00 4 00 45 ml i 00 100,00 clelhltlolvs stage lines on and after july 3 1871 salem to high point daily four dok.se coaches excursion lii-kcts â€” round trip good until oct loth wilmington to salem only 18 05 wilson " " " 13 85 t'lrhoi " " 10 15 stage offices â€” at 1'folil &_ stocktou's m.-iiclniiit's until winston n c at uutuer's hotel salem n c head of western railroad to asheville daily four lunsc uoacbcs except sunday â€” jkxcursiou tickets ti asheville for sale it the pi'ineipul hail kuiil offices on the north caro lina l.llill'oilll but-reen chatham and fayetteriileand wes tern llailroad daily except sunday charlotte to 7adesb0r0 and lll.al of v7 c 4 it it it leave charlotte mondav wednesday and friday lean wadesboro tuesday thurs â– i iv nml saturday making connection with k nlr.iaiu at charlotte and daily stage to head i.f wilmington char & ui.therfosd k r i'roin wadesboro by ihis route passengers leave wilmington ami charlotte monday wednes day and friday at 7 a in and arrive al wil luin-rtou and charlotte tu'xt evening resting at night in wadesboro each way through tickets from charlotte to wilniiug ton only 10 kingstree to georgetown c : leave georgetown monday wednesday aud friday return uexl hiy through tickets via n e railroad to char leston pi 00 e t clemmons june 24 1s71 â€” 26:tf contractor i â€” -* cia j i thesyniptoms of liver comp]aint me uneasiness telbhakosis'ilaiid pain in the side i i ksouit linn s the p:iiii is in ' " l"-t j lili shoulder and is mis a____tu_________t__t ja *> i ____ *>â– â– taken lor rheumatism the stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness bowels in general costive sometimes alternating with lax jp bcj , 3eam ; t|i , , u;i|1 j j ] with pain anil dull hea livhr | **'.**' sensation considcra jtme luss nf memory ac " ' co '^ k-i.ni|i mil 1 wiih painful si'iis.unii ufhaving li-n undone something which ought to have been done often complaining of weakness debility and low spirits sometimes many nf tbe nbove symptoms attend lhe disease and at other times verv few of them but the liver is generally the organ most involved â€” cure the liver with de simmons liter 8'il.v , 5 a preparation routs and herlis warranted to be strictly vegetable and can do no injury to any one h has been used by hundreds and known tor the lasi lil years as one of the most reliable efficacious and haramles preparations ever of fered in ibe sufll-riiig li taken regularly and ler-isientlv ii i sure to cure 1 1 ys|*epsia head ae he i bjaundicc,eostivciiess,siek regulator headache chronic diarr ____ _^__ r | ha*Â»,afieetionsoflheblad i pi_i-!'m_-i~ii i j i 1 ", camp dysentery af fections of tne kidneys nervousness chills dis e:!-es of the skiii impurity of the blood melan choly or depression of spirits heartburn colic oi pains in the bowels pain in the head fever agd ague diop-v imiis pain in the hack c prepared only by j ii zkilin & co druggists macon ( ia price 1 -. by mail si jo for sale i.v t 17 klittz v c >., febim ly salisbury n c preserving fruits xow is the propitious time fruits are abundant and every body sle iiiii realize the value of kruits properly preserved at a very trilling cost indeed spear's frail preserreng solution anu novry's preserving powder â€” which with the new directions accompany ing each now never fail a further full bupplv of both just at hand at e sill's din st ui salisbury n c aug 25 it southern land agency pkrsoxs vi>llln tu purchase sout ki.'n l.axlis v i i ut i t ,.;,;[ ,,,, messrs cyawfoid Â« dunham who are prepared to give all iiecess ry iiif'ii rtuatii a is it legards location price quality ac ail t-;s addressed to tbein at this place will !'â– ' sive prunipl attention cluwforl a dunham land agents mn lr].iy salisbury rowan county x c j w ayres manufacturer of cigars main street salisbury Â«_, v manufactures cigars from tbe best havana to bacco cheaper than they ean be bought any where else the choicest brands as follows tdk akial iii whole boxes at 55 per thous and tiik swan iu quarter boxes at 50 tiik la 1'ai'ii.io in whole boxes at 45 j uly 7 lm save your wheat & oais important notice to farmersj an important discovery to prevent rustin wheal liud dais if the directions arc careful ly followed iimi the crop is injured by rust the money will be cheerfully refunded all 1 a.sk is a trial prepared and i'or sale onl al j 11 enniss drop store july 7 tf salisbury wnter wheel mill gsarinf shafting puifeys - 7p00ush#%lm08ejj Â£ | c_send fcracircular g the new disinfectant blomo chloralum non-poisonous oderless powerful deo doriser and disinfectant â€” entirely harmless and safe â€” arrests and prevents contagion used in private dwelling's hotels restaurants public schools hospitals insiiiie asylums dispen saries jails prisons ponr-ltouses on slii|>s steam - lm:its iiiiii iii teiienient-lionses markets tor water closets urinals siuks sewers cess-pools stables a specific in all eontajrions and pestilential dis eases is t-liob ra ti ilioid lever sliip fever sipiiii pÂ«ix scarlet fever measles diseases of animals ic i'lepari'il on'v bv t.li.'exa co 176 william st n v sold by all druggists washhstgr r-"-^p^^~~t labor time mrw^^rtfa^m clothes & fuel ipjlÂ§Â£lh:7.-yv,x saved liv the use of , s_fei ? %Â»,*- v -* 77 1 . v â– warkbjld's fs v^l cold yvatki ji|m self-washing p<3j{y soap send for circular and price list agents wanted vvd.son !.()( kwllon everett 1 co 51 murray i-al new v rk s l j.t-nis '<Â«'â€¢ li .->â– i's f vjn-ii ia ni r h and south caro ina l'-t iiii unci fl riila nj w jf ff 1 ' t fruii anc ornamental for auisissibi oi 9s71 we invite tbe attention of planters and 1 i : . r to ion large and uomplete stock of m.iliiliiiil iimi llnorl 1 lli it lues rape v'inesanil small fruit ornauieutal trei s shrubs and plants new iimi hare fruit and ornamental trees ilulbous flower koots iiescriptive and illustrated priced catalogues sent prepaid on receipt ot stamp as follows no i fruits 10c no 9 ornamental trees 10c no 3-<_reen-house ioc no 4 wholesale free no 5 bulbs fice address ellw.vnckii v i:ai:i:y established 18i0c liochcster n v band leaders for something interesting send vour aridiess to ueokce v ijate.s fr*.nkfoit,.n v 4 hem's vi am ill i'm the a jba.\s_lll>sio of life ('â€¢ i'n.-ri.s ' n 111 nfll 1:1 mi ' vgifxk of til l ma.sii l'siiilx von li l n.iiu b iiio t^r ol tok pi:y 1 i 1l i ifk of woman ll i i'i i s t.i till m l.k six : n llll â– i lieu i is ; iltl'c.-ll imi nui n.kt-li ; ami opu ky ; l.ul v cuilorsci ; e 'â€¢ rapi iv ' .â– â– s 1 ; i-r-l price $'. a.i r s i rni.tei.ln lie , 1 li fl i_l_l Â£ i'.i l'u bsh i r i'i i_.-i.l i !,,.â– ,, i'.i tees m'rtaev kae.^kd how it is done iimi m in does it 11 e alena bonk 192 pages gorgeously illustrated witn cuts pesi tious tc si i.t by mail sei mely s-eaicd lor fifty cents craiiil ( in-ular fiee ailibes-s i'an.v lii.i'is i,ii llroadway new â– _ 1 1 1 k . agents ! head this ! wr will 1 â– :. >- agents t Â« isrv ol 80 dolla - r week __â– il i rises 11 11 w li i r i .- in is cm tu fell our n Â» nml h'li.uif 1 in 11 in ; . di.r.si m n's^cer i co mar hall mie . 30 wh wziii pa's 3o agents 3(1 in r w eek tose.i our great nnd valuable discoveries it you waut permanent honorable and pleasant work appl for patticulais address dyeh a co jackson michigan a million dollars shrewd but quiet wen can . iko a fortune by re vealing the so l tt nl the business tn uo one iddress wm wl.ay 688 broadway new york r rÂ«he undersigned hereby gives 1 notice ol his appointment as assignee of david shore of yadkin county who lus been peclnred a bankrupt by the district court o the united states thomas long huntsville n ('.. aug _!-*-, wl st if pure apple vinsgar for sals 20 bbls of apple vinegar of my own manufacture warranted puke and genuine â€” address wm ti barbee mliv 20-tf high point n c tc_>l3 r-riiitiiig of ull kinds l.y j j i from the rarnl carolinian clover clover a friend said to mo recently " in lime stone mih trios clover is bowii to enricl land ; throughout the colton states we have to enrich the land before we can grow clover my experience teaches thai this is a great mistake i am convinced that no where on lhis continent can clover be grown at less expense and with greater remuneration thau on the clay lands of lhe south al least as far south as t lie lati tude of the city of columbia s c a detail of a few experiments may not be uninteresting lo our readers in november 1sg7 i sowed eight acies of old land in barley and clover manured with iwo hundred pounds of soluble pa cific guano per acre in june 1sgs i reaped one handled and forty-five bush els of bailey and secured a beautiful stand of clover on about five acres in may 1sg1 twenty three heavy two horse loads of clover hay were housed the fill of isg'jwas so dry the crop was pastured ofi hy cattle and sheep the spring of lb70 though uncommonly dry produced a fair crop of clover the fall crop was again grazed off last ma i mowed a beautiful crop of bay and in july a se cond culling was housed for winter feed ing of sheep in february 18011 the palch wss broadcast with a mixture of eight bags of wando and six hundred pounds plaster last januaiy i tinned over wiih a two horse monitor plow all of his twenty-five aire fit id but tbe five acres will sei in clover and in april planted it in sorghum the three acres upon which there was a scattering stand of clover has had from its first appearance above ground infin itely the best sorghum iu the field and why ? because the dead clover the young clover and the roots of clover turned un der in januaiy have manured the land another experiment in isg7 i sowed a cow-penned patch of one and a half acres in bailej and clover and reported upon this patch in october and novem i ber months isc of the rural in may 1870 a very poor crop was taken from the patch and in october last the young clover was pastured off by sheep ' till scarcely a vestage was apparently left immediately afler lhe land was turned over villi a two horse brinicy followed bv a iwo-horse mm ire in same fuiiow and sown in ivheat this land which ihree years ago was a clay bank seemed now a rich triable black soil which i felt sure would produce a wheal crop ; but 1 feared lhe clover was gone so afier harrowing i sowed the in face wilh orchard grass seed the wheat and grass came up well but when i harvest ed in june the grass seemed choked out by as luxuriant a growth if clover as 1 ever saw where lhe seed came from i can't tell but the crop is there to show for it-elf ihird experiment i have slated above that the crop ofihe fall of 1sg9 was pas tured during this time the cattle and sheep were housed every night and iheir droppings sheltered until march 1 87 0 wlnii they were hauled out and thrown in furrows upon which beds were made and the land planted in cotton this last spring almost every oue of those beds for several inches on either side of lhe row of cotton stalks was covered wilh a thick growth of clover those neds were re versed aud the land again planted in cot ton al every winking ot ihe crop du ring tin sun mier a young grow tli of clover had to be destroyed fourtli experiment in april 1s70 i selected a half acre of good gray laud so thickly covered with nut grass that the ground could not be seen for a sweet pota to patch to lest lhe power of vines in eradicating nut grass by their shade â€” the land was itil off in five feet soaces and heavily manured in the driil wiih ma nure fiom lhe cow house and bedded upon in may the slips were set ou â€” first of duly the vims could not lie seen for the nut grass the patch was then lli roughly ploughed and hoed and by september u most luxuriant gowth of vines and nut grass covered the land last november lhe vines were cut and carried off the poiotoi-s dug the land ploughed aud cross-ploughed and about three pecks of barley harrowed in until lhe land was perfectly smooth last . i une a fair crop of barley was harvested and the stubble on at least half lhe patch was ina few days peifectly hid hy a complete growth of clover which all the summer kep the nut grass so iu cheek thai there is not a healthy stalk of this pest io he seen the first crop of clover has died and i lie second crop is spriii p iiig up beautifully what effect the suc ceeding growth of clover will hive upon lhe l.ui grass time alone can tell the experiment however is worth pushing t:i a further list for if clover ean be made instrumental in destroying nut grass its value will he increased tenfold tbe only difficulty with clover is se curing a stand 1 have sown it in no vember iu all kinds ol grain and seemed a perfect stand 1 have at other times wilh lhe very same practice been disap pointed by a most perfect failure 1 have sown it in february and never secured a piifcct stand good authority says it should be sown on a well-prepared clean laud in march and allowed to battle with weeds and grass for twelve months with out being trod upon my judgment is a fall sowing on char hind say iu septem ber oi october will ensure quite as good a stand aud so occupy the ground by spring that a contest with weeds and grass will not be liecessary at any rate a stand of clover ouce obtained need nev er be lost and is worth more annually than a crop of cotton could the latter be grown without work d wyatta1ren reported for the n y observer work but not worry sermon by rev ii m sadder jj d , brooklyn n y sunday evening sept 10th take therefore no thought for the mor row : for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself sufficient unto hie day is the evil thereof matt g 34 thought as used here means anxiety when we separate fiom father and mother and set up lor oui selves we entertain this question how shall we make a living and included in that are three important questions wha shall we eat what shall we drink ? and what shall we wear 1 two of these are absolute wants we cannot live without meat and drink aud for them we must woik the ravens will not feed us the sky will not drop down manna quails do not fall around our camp nor do our meal-barrels become fountains of flour the law is that man must work it he eat aud drink the sythiaus who lived anion j the snows go wiihout raiment ; w'.ien a cer tain monarch asked one of them if he was not cold he replied is not your face cold there are some south ameri can tribes who live without cloihing ; so that is not an absolute want but this dis use of clothing can only be with spotless purity sueh as adam and five before the la.ll and the remote extreme ofthe lowest barbarism the question becomes impera tive in civilized countries our clothes do not sprout out ot our bodies like the robe of thel'olar bear or the variegated feathers of the peacock as we advance iu life these questions grow every day man multiplies himself at fust he has only himself to provide lor ihen himself anti wife then himself wile and children the more figures in the sum the linger the product and as lhe ! man grows old perhaps weaker he has j mon mouths lo feed and more bodies to clothe accident may cripple him and what then will become of the bairns and the gude wife ? death cuts us all duwn aud who then will take care of our fami lies out of this i.ast fear has sprung one of the greatest business interests of the country liie insurance societies that build palaces to do their business in the net-work of lil is anxiety meat d>ink clothes cover a wide territory and outside of this is evil we have troubles iu our bod pains aches weakness and weariness troubles iu our soul of pas sion and conscience ; in the family a de luge of trouble irom grown up sons and daughters who disappoint our hopes ; mortifications humiliations ; numbeiless things collie uuder this name evil it is ' said that death makes equal the prince j and the beggar trouble also equalizes j them there is a common wealth of suf ! feiing the poor man toils eats sleeps and forgets his trouble while the rich man rolls on his bed through sleepless nights and perhaps commits suicide ihe question is how are we to meet these i roubles ? the stoical cynic ?â– "}'.-* : troubles must cnine i've got a litlie giit i'll clench | my teeth and bear it if wife or children l should die i'll not cry i'll steal my heart i against if what can't bu cured must be endured " this is better than nothing ; there is a given courage in it a rude bar 'â– baric courage in it lt may toughen a ! man bul it will not sustain or elevate him when the suigeon wants to per \ loini an operation he throws a certain i fluid on the part affected that produces 1 intense cold then lhe knife can be applied i without pain lint ought man to become i a mummy and bury himself away in a i sarcophagus of insensibility ? it is said i*i j j that some minor evils bring greater bene : fits in their train ! in a certain nut of liberia the people are very poor and the | niusqiiiloes very thick ; ihey build a j smothered fire around their houses to keep them away with the smoke cattle j will pu their heads into this smoke to get ml of the mosquitoes ; they come in â€¢ immense swarmsand drive the deer belore ; ihem ; ihese the people kill foi food sell â– the hides and wilh lhe money pay their taxes so they say ihey bite and bless us we make a big smoke and gel on as i we can thus a small evil produces a greater good unmixed prosperity is not : good for any one herodotus gives an in cident lo this point 1'olycrates ruler of sauios seemed to have no trouble â€” amasis tin king of egypt said to him you don't have any trouble you had ' hitter make a trouble for yourself l'o i lycra tea looked over his treasures and found a costly seal that he valued very highly this he dropped into thesea in a few days a fisherman brought a fish to his house and in it was the royal seal â€” u hen amasis heard of thi he said you'll coiut to some terrible trouble therefore 1 must renounce your friend sl)|p trial aud trouble quicken man's pow ers change peril vicissitude make up men and teach ihem to act with fortitude we want au antidote for mental restless ness and these trials of life when you cannot sleep you take morphine perhaps aud there is a new narcotic chloral which it was said a man can take every night without harm but many have died from il you had better stear clear of it christ of fers you an antidote take no thought for the morrow again we are told be i fervent iu spirit serving the lord ;" lhat i means boil over iu your work : and aÂ°*ain !** if vou do not work you must not ear ; i cud dots not want lazy monk and lazy nuns he means to say to us think and work but tlo not worry your heaven ly father knoweth what things ye have need cf before ye ask him christ brings five rare aud beautiful arguments in the 25th verse ; life is compared with meat and the body with raiment let us compare life with all the food we can think of throw into one pile all the incuts ou know cf then upon that all the vegetables and over that all kindsof fruits aud sprinkle the whole wiih all kinds of berries with that heap piled up as high as yon like compare one solitary human life take clothes boots shoes stockings pantaloons vests coats hats and all a lady's wardrobe silk dresses shawls bonnets cuffs lacs every thing you can think of i don't want to go through the whole list and what is all this pile to a human body ? christ said i've given you a life i've given yon a body if i've given you the greater good will 1 not add to it the lesser theu he gives us an argument from the lesser to greater the sparrow don't gather in to barns yet your heavenly father leedeth t hem they can t sow the o^^s thai will bring forth the worms which they have to eat birds work very hard to build a little nest this summer in the conntry 1 noticed the swallows in the chimney i was amazed to notice how often the old bird ctime to bring lliem food tiny work very hard fly for miles to get a lit tilts wcrin to carry to their i young and when lhe time comes they fly far off to some sequestered place where ! man never comes and without fear thev j can build their nests and rear iheir young the law of seed time and harvest is no law for them and christ says arc ye not much better than ihey 1 i'he average certainties of agriculture make us better off than the bird yet in all things they sing and praise cod by being happy and cheerful can we not learn a lesson of cheerfulness irom them as they fly in undulating course at every climax of these waves ot flight poised in the air they chirp aud sing consider the lily never did solomon in all his glory have â– so fine a garment as the lily they toil not neither do they spin they do not fret or worry but the lily works and nev er intermits is work until it dies it sends its liule roots out and gathers nourish ment and life from all about it so if we lilt our hearts to cod as the lil v lifts its face lo heaven we grow in strength and beauty you can't change the course of providence or lengthen tbe measure of liie by a fraction of lime worrying will not lengthen it will shorten life a man is shorter at night than in the morning lu the morning his body is relaxed but by night he sen lis down on his back-bone and is not so tall worrying will never improve you if cod holds the heavens he can hold you sufficient unto t iie day is the evil thereof no man has ever gained success iu any conflict by worrying mark out your work for to day and when it is completed say i will be content and leave ir to god fight to-day's battle and let to-morrow's come to-morrow god has made the night as a natural bulwark between to-day's trouble and work and to-morrow's trials these are christ's arguments a realization of rod's care makes a man able to conquer his daily troubles worrying never fat tens anybody \"> hy should a man wash his face in corrosive acids when tliere i plenty of water that will refresh it these arguments of christ inspire calmness if a man will practise them eve ry day he will have resolution and pati ence lie will be successful for these are the elements of success such a man is more likely to succeed than one who only works by spasms if a man is managing complicated ma chinery and does not have it oiled what wear and tear and rust there is every day christ's maxims art like oil they lubricate the machinery of life and make it work easily christianity helps men when ii boy is hurt is it not a help to run and till his mother and get her sympathy and strength god is our father and better than any mother he ean give us sympa thy in trouble trust in him lie en ters into the innermost care of every man's life believe this and we have an antidote to man's restlessness - . o a poor woman was arraigned for witch craft before end cief justice hill the witness deposed that she used a spell the spell produced in evidence â€” was a line from one of the classic poets writ ten on parchment the justice demand ed to see it and it was handed to him how came you by this '_" lie asked the prisoner a young gentleman my lord gave it to me to cure my daughter's ague did it cure her '*<) yes my lord and many others i am glad of it said lhe justice gentlemen of the jury when 1 was young and thoughtless i went to this woman's house with some compan ion and had no money to pay the reckon ing and pretended that by a spell i could cure her laughter's ague she ac cepted lhe proposition and let us off scot free if any one is punishable it is the lord chief just ice aud not thi poor woman of course slu was acquitted but lhe credulous multitude affirmed that the judge and the jury were all bribed tell that man to take oil his hat iu court siid a judge the other morning to an officer the offender who turned out to be a lady wearing the fashion able sailor hat indignantly cxclaimedl am no man sir !" ** 1'hen said his hon or i am no judge teacher 7m uy dear suppose i were to shoot at a tree with flv birds on it iind kill three how many would be left maiy four years old three teacher no two would be left mary no there wouldn't ihtiugh ; the three shot would he left and the other two would be flied a,-ay7 when a distinguished american dies said a shrewd sarcastic observer not long ago his admiring friends and country men immediately resolve to build him a magnificent monuments and then â€” ihey don't build it a shrewd confectioner in bangor his taught his parrot to say *' pretty creature to every womau that comes in his shop | and his busine rapidly increase household economy if bread and milk were used moie ex tensively animal food would be found ics9 necessary and a saving in that part of the household expense would conse quently be made when the bone fat and water is deducted from the butcher's meat as usually purchased for family use the residuum is obtained at hiirli cost in bread every hundred pounds weight is found to contain eighty pounds of nu tritious matter ; butcher's meat averaging the various sorts contains 31 pounds â€” turnips which arc the most aqueous of all vegetables used for domestic purposes furnish only eight pounds of nutritious substance in 100 pounds carrots 14 pounds and what is remarkable as being in opposition to the hitherto acknowledg ed theory 100 pounds or potatoes yield only 25 pounds of substance which is nu tritious according to this estimate 1 pound of good bread is equal to 3 pounds of potatoes to pounds of bread and 30 pounds of butcher's meat arc equal to 300 pounds of potatoes showing that for the sake of economy tbis vegetable cannot be obtained at low cost eggs though nutritions in some respects cannot sup port life without the addition of some oth er food containing phosphates liebig says with meat we aie able to sustain the life of a carnivorous animal but not so with eggs a dog eats the egg but does not digest ii and in the presence of a dishful of boiled albumen or boiled yolks of eggs or of both together he will die of starvation " on the other hand rice which contains the phosphate is wanting in albumen and must be eaten in con junction with meat or milk to supply this deficiency ll the mat ter of diet were more thoroughly looked into increased health would freqneutly be obtained at a saving of expense journal of applied chemistry a woman voter on saturday last miss canie l burn ham accompanied by daman y kilgore esq her law preceptor and legal adviser also by the vouchers demanded by law went before the hoard of assessors and demanded to be registered and assessed as a voter claiming to be a citizen ofthe united tatcs and therefore entitled to tin privileges and immunities of citizen ship the canvassers at first objected on account of her sex mr kilgore then read to them the law explaining that cit izenship was not confined in sex and that women from the very foundation of our ( lovernnient had been recognized as citi zens and that now under the consti'.n lion of the united states with its amend ments they wen justly entitled to all tbe privileges of citizenship equally with man her name was then registered she hav ing made the required affidavit and she received her certificate of assessment which s!i touk to the oflice ol the lie ceiver of taxes tendering therewith her fity cents i:li but little discussion mr ileal iy ne i.i d in r i;i x and gave her a tax n cipt i;i his own hand-writing â€” one coin i.i is ready for voting philadelphia nats tlte richest gold mine in the world and its owners â€” we clip the following from tbe correspondence of lhe new york times : " the eureka is the representative ledge of california and the best gold mine of modern times although iln eureka has proved itself lhe richest gold mine in the world il was not until november 1sg3 thai it was profitably worked the vein runs in a southeasterly and north easterly direction pitching west of south it an angle of 79 degrees the upper wall being syenite and the i-iwi r wall green o j 5 stone the rock is of sulphuret oder di vided into three grades paying at lhe rate of 400 300 aud 8214 respectively per ton for the sulphnrets which are worked to within five per cent of iin assay the quartz averages 84s per ton the gross yield of the mine in isgg amounted to i-(j!)g.0'>s and dividends during the same period being at the rate of 830,000 a month or 8300,000 for the year in isg7 it was about the same this year nearly s50.0u0 worth of new machinery has been added and dividends remain the same there are 1 800 feet in the claims and it is owned bv eleven san francisco lren j o tleinen five gentlemen of this citv aud three new yorkers messrs j ij dick inson thomas hope and benjamin illi man mr watt the superintendent took me through the mine and mill there arc two shafts respectively 100 and 500 feet ihere are 170 men at work in tin in in wiio extract about seventy tons of quartz per day there are two sixteen inch cyl inder engines â€” one for hoisting rock and the other for pumping water from the mini tin rock is put through one of blake's crushers then goes tu the mill the machinery of which consists of thirty stamps aud hunter's and the porcupine amalgation and washing furnacces for the reduction of lhe sulphnrets tin gold is also essayed and made into bars at the mill --.-___^ mrs shoddy â€” " lor i am so dull ! â€” what are you doing of mary dear miss mary nothing at all i'm en niiieu to death !" mrs shoddy â€” well ring the bell for john we'll have the cook up and scold her â€” just to kill time jones has discovered the respective nature of a distinction and a difference â€” says that a little difference frequently makes many euemies while a little dis tinction attracts hosts of friends to the one on whom it is conferred lidy's miiid come afier a place â€” " i beg pardon m'ni but was you the lady i was to attend ?" lady mary â€” ye lady's maid 0 theii,l think 1 was best say good morning there isn't the style i have been accustomed to " stick to the fence for fifteen years daily at stamford conn a man has sat on a fer.ee aid watched every railroad train as it passed exchange he is probably trying to make up his mind if it would be safe to ride in the cars < ld fellow you stick o that fence ! if the top rail is sharp turn it overor put a cushion on it fit up a smoking apart ment on the next panel if you like a:,d rig a luxurious couch on the next one to that bring out yonr baggage tako a check for it and hang it on a post bay a ticket and punch it yourself ask your self the distance to the next station and get insulted secure as your means vvill permit all the luxuries of railroad travel but don't get ofl that fence to enjoy them so shall you die a natural death and the good wife shall not expend the farm fight ing the life insurance companies over your cold corpse you're iu the right o this thing old rooster ! a perpetual candle the perpetual candle is the name of a useful contrivance which bas lately been introduced into lhis country from kussia it consists of a small tube within which is placed a close fitting wick soaked with kerosene this tube is screwed into a candlestick and fits inside anoiher tube made of while china and resembling closely a caudle in external appearance the whole having the look of an ordinary caudle and candlestick bv heating the top of tht brass tube the kerosene soaked wick generates a gas and gives a fine blaze through a number of small appcr turea in the end of the tube by ibis simple and ingenins arrangement it is aid a good light is furnished at a cost jf one cent for live hours besides the kiint of economy it is thought that the use of kerosene in this manner will be . ntircly free from danger of explosion prayer of a distracted people mr grosebeck in bis great speech at steu enville uttered the following invocation for lational blessings which may well serve as a orm of prayer forthe people of the uniud states i plead for the preservation of this union is ii limited government 1 plead for the state is our liiune government i plead for the ac customed freedom of our elections and that they iiliv not be spoiled by military supervision i il.iid for the sanctity ami inviolability of that jreat writ which alone secures our daily iierson il liberty the war is ended and we bave en tered tlte tenth year of peace 1 plead forthe nirit of peace and confidence and good will in ill our public conduct the hand outstretched iu friendly salutation is a better peacemaker than the li nt hand uplifted to strike a preaelier to he executed â€” some months ago hreen turner a negro preacher stole a mule in ijles county tenn while en routi to confer ence and was arrested in the pulpit in murfrei lioro a short time since he was sentenced to in hung within a mile of the pulaski court house on the 17th of november next during his trial he frequently compared his own ease to that of our saviour when he rod into jerusalem on a mule that he had found tied to a tree and argued in extenuation of his own crime that he simply followed the example of his master homicide â€” on tuesday afternoon last about ten miles above this place john < iardner a spe cial deputy of the sheritf'of this county shot anil killed john hemphill while attempting tn effect his arrest on a bench warrant gard ner surrendered hiniseli to the sheriff and is now in jail â€” yorkcille enquirer destroyed by fire â€” u wednesday nighl of last week the residence of dr j v wiseman in farmington davie county was entire v de stroyed by lire with most ol its contents tbe fire caught from the cooking stove in the kitch en â€” sni nt i'i < ss a negro all mpls lu commit a rap on a wl iti woman â€” gulf trice a negro was brought lo town last night and committed to jail ch with a bobl and desperate effort to rape a wliite woman whose name we withhold making pub lic â€” lltusbro record e wc learn says the goldsboro messenger oi the il inbuilt that on sunday evening hist the barn and its contents nt mr john m ( ox near spe.-jhts bridge greere county were totally de.-tiovi.-il by ina the work of an incendiary - mr i ox ami family were absent from home at the time later â€” since the above wis put in type we irani lhat a negro named amos kdwar i i a a heen arrested charged with ii rim tin barn he was given a preliminary examination before justice mckeel who deemed the evident ficient to warrant the commitment oi the j'.-i oner â€” raleigh sealiiu i ' where do you hail from queried a yankee of a traveller ' where do you rain from don't rain at all said ihe astonished jonathan ' neither do 1 bail so mind your own busiuess a little schoolboy presented li teach er tin following note from home as an ex cuse for tardiness : baby cross jlisc-ui to bake and no hiking p iwder â€” tie dog upset lhe kauphy pot the cat licked the milk â€” got up late excuse a play is acted in chicago theatre in which a man is hung f.r fun the night lhe gearing got out of order and liny came near hanging him for good â€” when ihey cut him down he said lie guessed tlu-y had better get some om to take his place as ' his neck was not talented enough to play tlmt part ofthe many remedies proposed to pi - vent boiler explosions tin louisville cou rier journal suggests that tin only ah - ittti-ly sure way io keep ihem trom ex ploding is to lili them with ice water and set them in a cooi place an unreasonable and s imewhat m ihropic acquaintance says tint he in i i ten heard ihe proverb * : a friend in uee ' is a friend indeed but he says lu cin'i sec where the laugh comes in hi has a friend in need who is always borrowin ; money from him fayetteville is '.â€¢> have street 1 imp 7.1 â€¢ afier getting the lamps tlu-y are al.'lc i . i i â– lliem lit thev will uc of no more use than our . hy the w.iy it would be a joo i mi a to -â€¢ !! oura newb i t i t,,f â– .

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vol 111 th1kd series salisbury n 1 october c 1871 no 3 whole no 795 carolina ttlatcljuifltt published weekly bt j j bruner editor and proprietor rates of si ihiui'hon o.ve ykai payaldein udvauce 2.50 six months **â€¢ '* 1 . r i t'upii-s to one address 10.00 kates of ailccrlisitiq on sqnare first insertion 1,00 for each additional iusertiou 50 special notices u ill be charged 50 per cent higher than the above rate court and justice's order will he publish ed at the same rates with other advertise ments obituary notices over six lines charged as advertise inentfi contract hates z i i Â£Â£ i o i ? =â– - * s space Â§ g ss 5 Â«= p ~ â€” l v * f si.iiare 2 50 â€¢â– *>.<> id ml 25,00 4 squaws k km 1iki 15 0025 00 3.1,50 i oliimn 18 00 24 00 30 00 40 00 00.00 1 column 25 00 4 00 45 ml i 00 100,00 clelhltlolvs stage lines on and after july 3 1871 salem to high point daily four dok.se coaches excursion lii-kcts â€” round trip good until oct loth wilmington to salem only 18 05 wilson " " " 13 85 t'lrhoi " " 10 15 stage offices â€” at 1'folil &_ stocktou's m.-iiclniiit's until winston n c at uutuer's hotel salem n c head of western railroad to asheville daily four lunsc uoacbcs except sunday â€” jkxcursiou tickets ti asheville for sale it the pi'ineipul hail kuiil offices on the north caro lina l.llill'oilll but-reen chatham and fayetteriileand wes tern llailroad daily except sunday charlotte to 7adesb0r0 and lll.al of v7 c 4 it it it leave charlotte mondav wednesday and friday lean wadesboro tuesday thurs â– i iv nml saturday making connection with k nlr.iaiu at charlotte and daily stage to head i.f wilmington char & ui.therfosd k r i'roin wadesboro by ihis route passengers leave wilmington ami charlotte monday wednes day and friday at 7 a in and arrive al wil luin-rtou and charlotte tu'xt evening resting at night in wadesboro each way through tickets from charlotte to wilniiug ton only 10 kingstree to georgetown c : leave georgetown monday wednesday aud friday return uexl hiy through tickets via n e railroad to char leston pi 00 e t clemmons june 24 1s71 â€” 26:tf contractor i â€” -* cia j i thesyniptoms of liver comp]aint me uneasiness telbhakosis'ilaiid pain in the side i i ksouit linn s the p:iiii is in ' " l"-t j lili shoulder and is mis a____tu_________t__t ja *> i ____ *>â– â– taken lor rheumatism the stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness bowels in general costive sometimes alternating with lax jp bcj , 3eam ; t|i , , u;i|1 j j ] with pain anil dull hea livhr | **'.**' sensation considcra jtme luss nf memory ac " ' co '^ k-i.ni|i mil 1 wiih painful si'iis.unii ufhaving li-n undone something which ought to have been done often complaining of weakness debility and low spirits sometimes many nf tbe nbove symptoms attend lhe disease and at other times verv few of them but the liver is generally the organ most involved â€” cure the liver with de simmons liter 8'il.v , 5 a preparation routs and herlis warranted to be strictly vegetable and can do no injury to any one h has been used by hundreds and known tor the lasi lil years as one of the most reliable efficacious and haramles preparations ever of fered in ibe sufll-riiig li taken regularly and ler-isientlv ii i sure to cure 1 1 ys|*epsia head ae he i bjaundicc,eostivciiess,siek regulator headache chronic diarr ____ _^__ r | ha*Â»,afieetionsoflheblad i pi_i-!'m_-i~ii i j i 1 ", camp dysentery af fections of tne kidneys nervousness chills dis e:!-es of the skiii impurity of the blood melan choly or depression of spirits heartburn colic oi pains in the bowels pain in the head fever agd ague diop-v imiis pain in the hack c prepared only by j ii zkilin & co druggists macon ( ia price 1 -. by mail si jo for sale i.v t 17 klittz v c >., febim ly salisbury n c preserving fruits xow is the propitious time fruits are abundant and every body sle iiiii realize the value of kruits properly preserved at a very trilling cost indeed spear's frail preserreng solution anu novry's preserving powder â€” which with the new directions accompany ing each now never fail a further full bupplv of both just at hand at e sill's din st ui salisbury n c aug 25 it southern land agency pkrsoxs vi>llln tu purchase sout ki.'n l.axlis v i i ut i t ,.;,;[ ,,,, messrs cyawfoid Â« dunham who are prepared to give all iiecess ry iiif'ii rtuatii a is it legards location price quality ac ail t-;s addressed to tbein at this place will !'â– ' sive prunipl attention cluwforl a dunham land agents mn lr].iy salisbury rowan county x c j w ayres manufacturer of cigars main street salisbury Â«_, v manufactures cigars from tbe best havana to bacco cheaper than they ean be bought any where else the choicest brands as follows tdk akial iii whole boxes at 55 per thous and tiik swan iu quarter boxes at 50 tiik la 1'ai'ii.io in whole boxes at 45 j uly 7 lm save your wheat & oais important notice to farmersj an important discovery to prevent rustin wheal liud dais if the directions arc careful ly followed iimi the crop is injured by rust the money will be cheerfully refunded all 1 a.sk is a trial prepared and i'or sale onl al j 11 enniss drop store july 7 tf salisbury wnter wheel mill gsarinf shafting puifeys - 7p00ush#%lm08ejj Â£ | c_send fcracircular g the new disinfectant blomo chloralum non-poisonous oderless powerful deo doriser and disinfectant â€” entirely harmless and safe â€” arrests and prevents contagion used in private dwelling's hotels restaurants public schools hospitals insiiiie asylums dispen saries jails prisons ponr-ltouses on slii|>s steam - lm:its iiiiii iii teiienient-lionses markets tor water closets urinals siuks sewers cess-pools stables a specific in all eontajrions and pestilential dis eases is t-liob ra ti ilioid lever sliip fever sipiiii pÂ«ix scarlet fever measles diseases of animals ic i'lepari'il on'v bv t.li.'exa co 176 william st n v sold by all druggists washhstgr r-"-^p^^~~t labor time mrw^^rtfa^m clothes & fuel ipjlÂ§Â£lh:7.-yv,x saved liv the use of , s_fei ? %Â»,*- v -* 77 1 . v â– warkbjld's fs v^l cold yvatki ji|m self-washing p<3j{y soap send for circular and price list agents wanted vvd.son !.()( kwllon everett 1 co 51 murray i-al new v rk s l j.t-nis 'â– i's f vjn-ii ia ni r h and south caro ina l'-t iiii unci fl riila nj w jf ff 1 ' t fruii anc ornamental for auisissibi oi 9s71 we invite tbe attention of planters and 1 i : . r to ion large and uomplete stock of m.iliiliiiil iimi llnorl 1 lli it lues rape v'inesanil small fruit ornauieutal trei s shrubs and plants new iimi hare fruit and ornamental trees ilulbous flower koots iiescriptive and illustrated priced catalogues sent prepaid on receipt ot stamp as follows no i fruits 10c no 9 ornamental trees 10c no 3-sio of life ('â€¢ i'n.-ri.s ' n 111 nfll 1:1 mi ' vgifxk of til l ma.sii l'siiilx von li l n.iiu b iiio t^r ol tok pi:y 1 i 1l i ifk of woman ll i i'i i s t.i till m l.k six : n llll â– i lieu i is ; iltl'c.-ll imi nui n.kt-li ; ami opu ky ; l.ul v cuilorsci ; e 'â€¢ rapi iv ' .â– â– s 1 ; i-r-l price $'. a.i r s i rni.tei.ln lie , 1 li fl i_l_l Â£ i'.i l'u bsh i r i'i i_.-i.l i !,,.â– ,, i'.i tees m'rtaev kae.^kd how it is done iimi m in does it 11 e alena bonk 192 pages gorgeously illustrated witn cuts pesi tious tc si i.t by mail sei mely s-eaicd lor fifty cents craiiil ( in-ular fiee ailibes-s i'an.v lii.i'is i,ii llroadway new â– _ 1 1 1 k . agents ! head this ! wr will 1 â– :. >- agents t Â« isrv ol 80 dolla - r week __â– il i rises 11 11 w li i r i .- in is cm tu fell our n Â» nml h'li.uif 1 in 11 in ; . di.r.si m n's^cer i co mar hall mie . 30 wh wziii pa's 3o agents 3(1 in r w eek tose.i our great nnd valuable discoveries it you waut permanent honorable and pleasant work appl for patticulais address dyeh a co jackson michigan a million dollars shrewd but quiet wen can . iko a fortune by re vealing the so l tt nl the business tn uo one iddress wm wl.ay 688 broadway new york r rÂ«he undersigned hereby gives 1 notice ol his appointment as assignee of david shore of yadkin county who lus been peclnred a bankrupt by the district court o the united states thomas long huntsville n ('.. aug _!-*-, wl st if pure apple vinsgar for sals 20 bbls of apple vinegar of my own manufacture warranted puke and genuine â€” address wm ti barbee mliv 20-tf high point n c tc_>l3 r-riiitiiig of ull kinds l.y j j i from the rarnl carolinian clover clover a friend said to mo recently " in lime stone mih trios clover is bowii to enricl land ; throughout the colton states we have to enrich the land before we can grow clover my experience teaches thai this is a great mistake i am convinced that no where on lhis continent can clover be grown at less expense and with greater remuneration thau on the clay lands of lhe south al least as far south as t lie lati tude of the city of columbia s c a detail of a few experiments may not be uninteresting lo our readers in november 1sg7 i sowed eight acies of old land in barley and clover manured with iwo hundred pounds of soluble pa cific guano per acre in june 1sgs i reaped one handled and forty-five bush els of bailey and secured a beautiful stand of clover on about five acres in may 1sg1 twenty three heavy two horse loads of clover hay were housed the fill of isg'jwas so dry the crop was pastured ofi hy cattle and sheep the spring of lb70 though uncommonly dry produced a fair crop of clover the fall crop was again grazed off last ma i mowed a beautiful crop of bay and in july a se cond culling was housed for winter feed ing of sheep in february 18011 the palch wss broadcast with a mixture of eight bags of wando and six hundred pounds plaster last januaiy i tinned over wiih a two horse monitor plow all of his twenty-five aire fit id but tbe five acres will sei in clover and in april planted it in sorghum the three acres upon which there was a scattering stand of clover has had from its first appearance above ground infin itely the best sorghum iu the field and why ? because the dead clover the young clover and the roots of clover turned un der in januaiy have manured the land another experiment in isg7 i sowed a cow-penned patch of one and a half acres in bailej and clover and reported upon this patch in october and novem i ber months isc of the rural in may 1870 a very poor crop was taken from the patch and in october last the young clover was pastured off by sheep ' till scarcely a vestage was apparently left immediately afler lhe land was turned over villi a two horse brinicy followed bv a iwo-horse mm ire in same fuiiow and sown in ivheat this land which ihree years ago was a clay bank seemed now a rich triable black soil which i felt sure would produce a wheal crop ; but 1 feared lhe clover was gone so afier harrowing i sowed the in face wilh orchard grass seed the wheat and grass came up well but when i harvest ed in june the grass seemed choked out by as luxuriant a growth if clover as 1 ever saw where lhe seed came from i can't tell but the crop is there to show for it-elf ihird experiment i have slated above that the crop ofihe fall of 1sg9 was pas tured during this time the cattle and sheep were housed every night and iheir droppings sheltered until march 1 87 0 wlnii they were hauled out and thrown in furrows upon which beds were made and the land planted in cotton this last spring almost every oue of those beds for several inches on either side of lhe row of cotton stalks was covered wilh a thick growth of clover those neds were re versed aud the land again planted in cot ton al every winking ot ihe crop du ring tin sun mier a young grow tli of clover had to be destroyed fourtli experiment in april 1s70 i selected a half acre of good gray laud so thickly covered with nut grass that the ground could not be seen for a sweet pota to patch to lest lhe power of vines in eradicating nut grass by their shade â€” the land was itil off in five feet soaces and heavily manured in the driil wiih ma nure fiom lhe cow house and bedded upon in may the slips were set ou â€” first of duly the vims could not lie seen for the nut grass the patch was then lli roughly ploughed and hoed and by september u most luxuriant gowth of vines and nut grass covered the land last november lhe vines were cut and carried off the poiotoi-s dug the land ploughed aud cross-ploughed and about three pecks of barley harrowed in until lhe land was perfectly smooth last . i une a fair crop of barley was harvested and the stubble on at least half lhe patch was ina few days peifectly hid hy a complete growth of clover which all the summer kep the nut grass so iu cheek thai there is not a healthy stalk of this pest io he seen the first crop of clover has died and i lie second crop is spriii p iiig up beautifully what effect the suc ceeding growth of clover will hive upon lhe l.ui grass time alone can tell the experiment however is worth pushing t:i a further list for if clover ean be made instrumental in destroying nut grass its value will he increased tenfold tbe only difficulty with clover is se curing a stand 1 have sown it in no vember iu all kinds ol grain and seemed a perfect stand 1 have at other times wilh lhe very same practice been disap pointed by a most perfect failure 1 have sown it in february and never secured a piifcct stand good authority says it should be sown on a well-prepared clean laud in march and allowed to battle with weeds and grass for twelve months with out being trod upon my judgment is a fall sowing on char hind say iu septem ber oi october will ensure quite as good a stand aud so occupy the ground by spring that a contest with weeds and grass will not be liecessary at any rate a stand of clover ouce obtained need nev er be lost and is worth more annually than a crop of cotton could the latter be grown without work d wyatta1ren reported for the n y observer work but not worry sermon by rev ii m sadder jj d , brooklyn n y sunday evening sept 10th take therefore no thought for the mor row : for the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself sufficient unto hie day is the evil thereof matt g 34 thought as used here means anxiety when we separate fiom father and mother and set up lor oui selves we entertain this question how shall we make a living and included in that are three important questions wha shall we eat what shall we drink ? and what shall we wear 1 two of these are absolute wants we cannot live without meat and drink aud for them we must woik the ravens will not feed us the sky will not drop down manna quails do not fall around our camp nor do our meal-barrels become fountains of flour the law is that man must work it he eat aud drink the sythiaus who lived anion j the snows go wiihout raiment ; w'.ien a cer tain monarch asked one of them if he was not cold he replied is not your face cold there are some south ameri can tribes who live without cloihing ; so that is not an absolute want but this dis use of clothing can only be with spotless purity sueh as adam and five before the la.ll and the remote extreme ofthe lowest barbarism the question becomes impera tive in civilized countries our clothes do not sprout out ot our bodies like the robe of thel'olar bear or the variegated feathers of the peacock as we advance iu life these questions grow every day man multiplies himself at fust he has only himself to provide lor ihen himself anti wife then himself wile and children the more figures in the sum the linger the product and as lhe ! man grows old perhaps weaker he has j mon mouths lo feed and more bodies to clothe accident may cripple him and what then will become of the bairns and the gude wife ? death cuts us all duwn aud who then will take care of our fami lies out of this i.ast fear has sprung one of the greatest business interests of the country liie insurance societies that build palaces to do their business in the net-work of lil is anxiety meat d>ink clothes cover a wide territory and outside of this is evil we have troubles iu our bod pains aches weakness and weariness troubles iu our soul of pas sion and conscience ; in the family a de luge of trouble irom grown up sons and daughters who disappoint our hopes ; mortifications humiliations ; numbeiless things collie uuder this name evil it is ' said that death makes equal the prince j and the beggar trouble also equalizes j them there is a common wealth of suf ! feiing the poor man toils eats sleeps and forgets his trouble while the rich man rolls on his bed through sleepless nights and perhaps commits suicide ihe question is how are we to meet these i roubles ? the stoical cynic ?â– "}'.-* : troubles must cnine i've got a litlie giit i'll clench | my teeth and bear it if wife or children l should die i'll not cry i'll steal my heart i against if what can't bu cured must be endured " this is better than nothing ; there is a given courage in it a rude bar 'â– baric courage in it lt may toughen a ! man bul it will not sustain or elevate him when the suigeon wants to per \ loini an operation he throws a certain i fluid on the part affected that produces 1 intense cold then lhe knife can be applied i without pain lint ought man to become i a mummy and bury himself away in a i sarcophagus of insensibility ? it is said i*i j j that some minor evils bring greater bene : fits in their train ! in a certain nut of liberia the people are very poor and the | niusqiiiloes very thick ; ihey build a j smothered fire around their houses to keep them away with the smoke cattle j will pu their heads into this smoke to get ml of the mosquitoes ; they come in â€¢ immense swarmsand drive the deer belore ; ihem ; ihese the people kill foi food sell â– the hides and wilh lhe money pay their taxes so they say ihey bite and bless us we make a big smoke and gel on as i we can thus a small evil produces a greater good unmixed prosperity is not : good for any one herodotus gives an in cident lo this point 1'olycrates ruler of sauios seemed to have no trouble â€” amasis tin king of egypt said to him you don't have any trouble you had ' hitter make a trouble for yourself l'o i lycra tea looked over his treasures and found a costly seal that he valued very highly this he dropped into thesea in a few days a fisherman brought a fish to his house and in it was the royal seal â€” u hen amasis heard of thi he said you'll coiut to some terrible trouble therefore 1 must renounce your friend sl)|p trial aud trouble quicken man's pow ers change peril vicissitude make up men and teach ihem to act with fortitude we want au antidote for mental restless ness and these trials of life when you cannot sleep you take morphine perhaps aud there is a new narcotic chloral which it was said a man can take every night without harm but many have died from il you had better stear clear of it christ of fers you an antidote take no thought for the morrow again we are told be i fervent iu spirit serving the lord ;" lhat i means boil over iu your work : and aÂ°*ain !** if vou do not work you must not ear ; i cud dots not want lazy monk and lazy nuns he means to say to us think and work but tlo not worry your heaven ly father knoweth what things ye have need cf before ye ask him christ brings five rare aud beautiful arguments in the 25th verse ; life is compared with meat and the body with raiment let us compare life with all the food we can think of throw into one pile all the incuts ou know cf then upon that all the vegetables and over that all kindsof fruits aud sprinkle the whole wiih all kinds of berries with that heap piled up as high as yon like compare one solitary human life take clothes boots shoes stockings pantaloons vests coats hats and all a lady's wardrobe silk dresses shawls bonnets cuffs lacs every thing you can think of i don't want to go through the whole list and what is all this pile to a human body ? christ said i've given you a life i've given yon a body if i've given you the greater good will 1 not add to it the lesser theu he gives us an argument from the lesser to greater the sparrow don't gather in to barns yet your heavenly father leedeth t hem they can t sow the o^^s thai will bring forth the worms which they have to eat birds work very hard to build a little nest this summer in the conntry 1 noticed the swallows in the chimney i was amazed to notice how often the old bird ctime to bring lliem food tiny work very hard fly for miles to get a lit tilts wcrin to carry to their i young and when lhe time comes they fly far off to some sequestered place where ! man never comes and without fear thev j can build their nests and rear iheir young the law of seed time and harvest is no law for them and christ says arc ye not much better than ihey 1 i'he average certainties of agriculture make us better off than the bird yet in all things they sing and praise cod by being happy and cheerful can we not learn a lesson of cheerfulness irom them as they fly in undulating course at every climax of these waves ot flight poised in the air they chirp aud sing consider the lily never did solomon in all his glory have â– so fine a garment as the lily they toil not neither do they spin they do not fret or worry but the lily works and nev er intermits is work until it dies it sends its liule roots out and gathers nourish ment and life from all about it so if we lilt our hearts to cod as the lil v lifts its face lo heaven we grow in strength and beauty you can't change the course of providence or lengthen tbe measure of liie by a fraction of lime worrying will not lengthen it will shorten life a man is shorter at night than in the morning lu the morning his body is relaxed but by night he sen lis down on his back-bone and is not so tall worrying will never improve you if cod holds the heavens he can hold you sufficient unto t iie day is the evil thereof no man has ever gained success iu any conflict by worrying mark out your work for to day and when it is completed say i will be content and leave ir to god fight to-day's battle and let to-morrow's come to-morrow god has made the night as a natural bulwark between to-day's trouble and work and to-morrow's trials these are christ's arguments a realization of rod's care makes a man able to conquer his daily troubles worrying never fat tens anybody \"> hy should a man wash his face in corrosive acids when tliere i plenty of water that will refresh it these arguments of christ inspire calmness if a man will practise them eve ry day he will have resolution and pati ence lie will be successful for these are the elements of success such a man is more likely to succeed than one who only works by spasms if a man is managing complicated ma chinery and does not have it oiled what wear and tear and rust there is every day christ's maxims art like oil they lubricate the machinery of life and make it work easily christianity helps men when ii boy is hurt is it not a help to run and till his mother and get her sympathy and strength god is our father and better than any mother he ean give us sympa thy in trouble trust in him lie en ters into the innermost care of every man's life believe this and we have an antidote to man's restlessness - . o a poor woman was arraigned for witch craft before end cief justice hill the witness deposed that she used a spell the spell produced in evidence â€” was a line from one of the classic poets writ ten on parchment the justice demand ed to see it and it was handed to him how came you by this '_" lie asked the prisoner a young gentleman my lord gave it to me to cure my daughter's ague did it cure her '*s and dividends during the same period being at the rate of 830,000 a month or 8300,000 for the year in isg7 it was about the same this year nearly s50.0u0 worth of new machinery has been added and dividends remain the same there are 1 800 feet in the claims and it is owned bv eleven san francisco lren j o tleinen five gentlemen of this citv aud three new yorkers messrs j ij dick inson thomas hope and benjamin illi man mr watt the superintendent took me through the mine and mill there arc two shafts respectively 100 and 500 feet ihere are 170 men at work in tin in in wiio extract about seventy tons of quartz per day there are two sixteen inch cyl inder engines â€” one for hoisting rock and the other for pumping water from the mini tin rock is put through one of blake's crushers then goes tu the mill the machinery of which consists of thirty stamps aud hunter's and the porcupine amalgation and washing furnacces for the reduction of lhe sulphnrets tin gold is also essayed and made into bars at the mill --.-___^ mrs shoddy â€” " lor i am so dull ! â€” what are you doing of mary dear miss mary nothing at all i'm en niiieu to death !" mrs shoddy â€” well ring the bell for john we'll have the cook up and scold her â€” just to kill time jones has discovered the respective nature of a distinction and a difference â€” says that a little difference frequently makes many euemies while a little dis tinction attracts hosts of friends to the one on whom it is conferred lidy's miiid come afier a place â€” " i beg pardon m'ni but was you the lady i was to attend ?" lady mary â€” ye lady's maid 0 theii,l think 1 was best say good morning there isn't the style i have been accustomed to " stick to the fence for fifteen years daily at stamford conn a man has sat on a fer.ee aid watched every railroad train as it passed exchange he is probably trying to make up his mind if it would be safe to ride in the cars < ld fellow you stick o that fence ! if the top rail is sharp turn it overor put a cushion on it fit up a smoking apart ment on the next panel if you like a:,d rig a luxurious couch on the next one to that bring out yonr baggage tako a check for it and hang it on a post bay a ticket and punch it yourself ask your self the distance to the next station and get insulted secure as your means vvill permit all the luxuries of railroad travel but don't get ofl that fence to enjoy them so shall you die a natural death and the good wife shall not expend the farm fight ing the life insurance companies over your cold corpse you're iu the right o this thing old rooster ! a perpetual candle the perpetual candle is the name of a useful contrivance which bas lately been introduced into lhis country from kussia it consists of a small tube within which is placed a close fitting wick soaked with kerosene this tube is screwed into a candlestick and fits inside anoiher tube made of while china and resembling closely a caudle in external appearance the whole having the look of an ordinary caudle and candlestick bv heating the top of tht brass tube the kerosene soaked wick generates a gas and gives a fine blaze through a number of small appcr turea in the end of the tube by ibis simple and ingenins arrangement it is aid a good light is furnished at a cost jf one cent for live hours besides the kiint of economy it is thought that the use of kerosene in this manner will be . ntircly free from danger of explosion prayer of a distracted people mr grosebeck in bis great speech at steu enville uttered the following invocation for lational blessings which may well serve as a orm of prayer forthe people of the uniud states i plead for the preservation of this union is ii limited government 1 plead for the state is our liiune government i plead for the ac customed freedom of our elections and that they iiliv not be spoiled by military supervision i il.iid for the sanctity ami inviolability of that jreat writ which alone secures our daily iierson il liberty the war is ended and we bave en tered tlte tenth year of peace 1 plead forthe nirit of peace and confidence and good will in ill our public conduct the hand outstretched iu friendly salutation is a better peacemaker than the li nt hand uplifted to strike a preaelier to he executed â€” some months ago hreen turner a negro preacher stole a mule in ijles county tenn while en routi to confer ence and was arrested in the pulpit in murfrei lioro a short time since he was sentenced to in hung within a mile of the pulaski court house on the 17th of november next during his trial he frequently compared his own ease to that of our saviour when he rod into jerusalem on a mule that he had found tied to a tree and argued in extenuation of his own crime that he simply followed the example of his master homicide â€” on tuesday afternoon last about ten miles above this place john < iardner a spe cial deputy of the sheritf'of this county shot anil killed john hemphill while attempting tn effect his arrest on a bench warrant gard ner surrendered hiniseli to the sheriff and is now in jail â€” yorkcille enquirer destroyed by fire â€” u wednesday nighl of last week the residence of dr j v wiseman in farmington davie county was entire v de stroyed by lire with most ol its contents tbe fire caught from the cooking stove in the kitch en â€” sni nt i'i < ss a negro all mpls lu commit a rap on a wl iti woman â€” gulf trice a negro was brought lo town last night and committed to jail ch with a bobl and desperate effort to rape a wliite woman whose name we withhold making pub lic â€” lltusbro record e wc learn says the goldsboro messenger oi the il inbuilt that on sunday evening hist the barn and its contents nt mr john m ( ox near spe.-jhts bridge greere county were totally de.-tiovi.-il by ina the work of an incendiary - mr i ox ami family were absent from home at the time later â€” since the above wis put in type we irani lhat a negro named amos kdwar i i a a heen arrested charged with ii rim tin barn he was given a preliminary examination before justice mckeel who deemed the evident ficient to warrant the commitment oi the j'.-i oner â€” raleigh sealiiu i ' where do you hail from queried a yankee of a traveller ' where do you rain from don't rain at all said ihe astonished jonathan ' neither do 1 bail so mind your own busiuess a little schoolboy presented li teach er tin following note from home as an ex cuse for tardiness : baby cross jlisc-ui to bake and no hiking p iwder â€” tie dog upset lhe kauphy pot the cat licked the milk â€” got up late excuse a play is acted in chicago theatre in which a man is hung f.r fun the night lhe gearing got out of order and liny came near hanging him for good â€” when ihey cut him down he said lie guessed tlu-y had better get some om to take his place as ' his neck was not talented enough to play tlmt part ofthe many remedies proposed to pi - vent boiler explosions tin louisville cou rier journal suggests that tin only ah - ittti-ly sure way io keep ihem trom ex ploding is to lili them with ice water and set them in a cooi place an unreasonable and s imewhat m ihropic acquaintance says tint he in i i ten heard ihe proverb * : a friend in uee ' is a friend indeed but he says lu cin'i sec where the laugh comes in hi has a friend in need who is always borrowin ; money from him fayetteville is '.â€¢> have street 1 imp 7.1 â€¢ afier getting the lamps tlu-y are al.'lc i . i i â– lliem lit thev will uc of no more use than our . hy the w.iy it would be a joo i mi a to -â€¢ !! oura newb i t i t,,f â– .